Title

Title
-----
Lightweight testing
Author
------
Sebastian.Egner@philips.com
Abstract
--------
A simple mechanism is defined for testing Scheme programs.
As a most primitive example, the expression
(check (+ 1 1) => 3)
evaluates the expression (+ 1 1) and compares the result
with the expected result 3 provided after the syntactic
keyword =>. Then the outcome of this comparison is reported
in human-readable form by printing a message of the form
(+ 1 1) => 2 ; *** failed ***
; expected result: 3
Moreover, the outcome of any executed check is recorded
in a global state counting the number of correct and failed
checks and storing the first failed check. At the end of a
file, or at any other point, the user can print a summary.
In addition to the simple test above, it is also possible
to execute a parametric sequence of checks. Syntactically,
this takes the form of an eager comprehension in the sense
of SRFI 42 [5]. For example,
(check-ec (:range e 100)
(:let x (expt 2.0 e))
(= (+ x 1) x) => #f (e x))
This statement runs the variable e through {0..99} and
for each binding defines x as (expt 2.0 e). Then it is
checked if (+ x 1) is equal to x, and it is expected that
this is not the case (i.e. expected value is #f). The
trailing (e x) tells the reporting mechanism to print
the values of both e and x in case of a failed check.
The output could look like this:
(let ((e 53) (x 9007199254740992.0)) (= (+ x 1) x)) => #t ; *** failed ***
; expected result: #f
The specification of bindings to report, (e x) in the
example, is optional but very informative.
Other features of this SRFI are:
* A way to specify a different equality predicate (default is equal?).
* Controlling the amount of reporting being printed.
* Switching off the execution and reporting of checks entriely.
* Retrieving a boolean if all checks have been executed and passed.
Rationale
---------
The mechanism defined in this SRFI should be available in
every Scheme system because it has already proven useful
for interactive development---of SRFIs.
Although it is extremely straight-forward, the origin of the
particular mechanism described here is the 'examples.scm' file
accompanying the reference implementation of SRFI 42.
The same mechanism has been reimplemented for the reference
implementation of SRFI 67, and a simplified version is yet
again found in the reference implementation of SRFI 77.
The mechanism in this SRFI does not replace more sophisticated
approaches to unit testing, like SRFI 64 [1] or SchemeUnit [2].
These systems provide more control of the testing, separate
the definition of a test, its execution, and its reports, and
provide several other features.
Neil Van Dyke's Testeez library [3] is very close in spirit
to this SRFI. In Testeez, tests are disabled by (re-)defining a
macro. The advantage of this method is that the code for the
test cases can be removed entirely, and hence even the dependency
on the Testeez library. This SRFI on the other hand, uses a
Scheme conditional (COND, IF) to prevent execution of the
testing code. This method is more dynamic but retains dead
testing code, unless a compiler and a module system are used
to apply constant folding and dead code elimination. The only
major addition in SRFI over Testeez is the comprehension for
formulating parametric tests.
Design considerations for this SRFI include the following:
* Reporting is human-readable and as specific as possible,
i.e. not just "assertion failed" but the expression with
actual and expected value, and if possibly the relevant
part of the bindings environment.
* An effort is made to print closed Scheme expressions, i.e.
expressions that can directly be copy/pasted into a REPL
for further analysis (e.g. the let expression in the abstract).
* By default the checks report both correct and failed checks.
However, it is possible to reduce the output---or even to
switch off the execution of checks. It has turned out useful
to be able to run only some subset checks for the features
currently under development. This can be done by changing
the reporting mode between differnt sections.
* The global state (correct/failed count) is not made available
to the user program. This reduces the dependencies between
different checks because it is not possible to use the state.
* Ocassionally, it is useful to check that a certain expression
does *not* yield an ordinary result but raises an error. However,
R5RS [4] does not specify the mechanism by which this occurs
(e.g. raising exception, breaking into a REPL, aborting the
program, etc.). For this reason, this SRFI is restricted to
the case that the checked expressions evaluate normally.
* Though usually I am very much in favor of strictly prefix
syntax, for this SRFI I make an exception because the
infix "=>" syntax is widely used and intuitive.
Specification
-------------
(check <expr> (=> <equal>) <expected>) MACRO
(check <expr> => <expected>)
evaluates <expr> and compares the value to the value
of <expected> using the predicate <equal>, which is
equal? when omitted. Then a report is printed according
to the current mode setting (see below) and the outcome
is recorded in a global state to be used in check-report.
The precise order of evaluation is that first <equal>
and <expected> are evaluated (in unspecified order) and
then <expr> is evaluated.
Example: (check (+ 1 1) => 2)
(check-ec <qualifier>^* <expr> (=> <equal>) <expected> (<argument>^*)) MACRO
(check-ec <qualifier>^* <expr> => <expected> (<argument>^*))
(check-ec <qualifier>^* <expr> (=> <equal>) <expected>)
(check-ec <qualifier>^* <expr> => <expected>)
an eager comprehension for executing a parametric set of checks.
Enumerates the sequence of bindings specified by <qualifier>^*.
For each binding evaluates <equal> and <expected> in unspecified
order. Then evalues <expr> and compares the value obtained to the
value of <expected> using the value of <equal> as predicate, which
is equal? when omitted.
The comprehension stops after the first failed check, if there
is any. Then a report is printed according to the current mode
setting (see below) and the outcome is recorded in a global state
to be used in check-report. The entire check-ec counts as a single
check.
In case the check fails <argument>^* is used for constructing an
informative message with the argument values. Use <argument>^* to
list the relevant free variables of <expr> (see examples) that you
want to have printed.
A <qualifier> is any qualifier of an eager comprehension as
specified in SRFI 42 [1].
Examples:
(check-ec (: e 100) (positive? (expt 2 e)) => #t (e)) ; fails on fixnums
(check-ec (: e 100) (:let x (expt 2.0 e)) (= (+ x 1) x) => #f (x)) ; fails
(check-ec (: x 10) (: y 10) (: z 10)
(* x (+ y z)) => (+ (* x y) (* x z))
(x y z)) ; passes with 10^3 cases checked
(check-report) PROCEDURE
prints a summary and the first failed check, if there is any,
depending on the current mode settings.
(check-set-mode! mode) PROCEDURE
sets the current mode to mode, which must be a symbol in
'(off summary report-failed report), default is 'report.
The mode symbols have the following meaning:
off: do not execute any of the checks
summary: print only summary in (check-report) and nothing else
report-failed: report failed checks when they happen, and in summary
report: report every example executed
Note that you can change the mode at any time, and that check,
check-ec and check-report use the current value.
(check-reset!) PROCEDURE
resets the global state (counters of correct/failed examples)
to the state immediately after loading the module for the
first time, i.e. no checks have been executed.
(check-passed? expected-total-count) PROCEDURE
#t if there were no failed checks and expected-total-count
correct checks, #f otherwise.
Rationale: This procedure can be used in automatized
tests by terminating a test program with the statement
(exit (if (check-passed? <n>) 0 1)).
Reference implementation
------------------------
'check.scm':
implementation in R5RS + SRFI 23 (error) + SRFI 42 (comprehensions);
tested under PLT 208p1 and Scheme 48 1.3.
'examples.scm':
a few examples.
References
----------
[1] SRFI 64 by Per Bothner: A Scheme API for test suites. January 2005.
http://srfi.schemers.org/srfi-64
[2] Noel Welsh: SchemeUnit. February 2003.
http://schematics.sourceforge.net/schemeunit.html
[3] Neil Van Dyke:
Testeez, Lightweight Unit Test Mechanism for Scheme. May 2005.
http://www.neilvandyke.org/testeez
[4] Revised^5 Report on the Algorithmic Language Scheme (R5RS).
http://www.schemers.org/Documents/Standards/R5RS/
[5] SRFI 42 by Sebastian Egner: Eager Comprehensions.
http://srfi.schemers.org/srfi-42
Copyright
---------
Copyright (C) Sebastian Egner (2005-2006). All Rights Reserved.
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